[0001] The present invention concerns with a method for moulding jaws on surfaces of trinkets
and jewellry goods.
[0002] As known, jaws are metal jocks which, like rings, brooches and other goods, lock
precious stones or not, placed on the surface of such a trinket and jewellry goods,
in trinket and jewellry goods.
[0003] Generally jaws are obtained by founding or by pressure die-casting together with
the including support.
[0004] The impossibility to lower over a preset limit the thickness of the support is one
of the limits of the founding technique.
[0005] This is because of the objective difficulty to make a good sliding of the founded
metal.
[0006] For this reason it is not possible to obtain good quality-jaws with supporting thicknesses
lower than 0,35-0,40 mm. Obviously, this can represent a limit not negligible, because
the impossibility to lower the thicknesses becomes the impossibility to lower the
weights of the resulting precious goods.
[0007] Another limit is the low productivity from the machines which make pressure die-casting
jaws, because the operative rhythm is not higher than 20 pieces in one minute.
[0008] The object of the present invention is to overcome said limits. It is especially
wanted to find an alternative method to the founding technique to make jaws starting
from a plane metal sheet, so that the thickness limits of the jaw support, up to now
set to 0,35-0,40 mm, can be overcome. In this way the goods with lower thicknesses
can be lighter.
[0009] It is also expected that the jaws obtained with a different method and with thicknesses
lighter than the founding technique ones, are not jaws qualitatively inferior as regards
the capacity to maintain fixed the stones which are locked by these jaws. Moreover
another purpose to reach is that the jaws are obtained on the plane metal sheet without
making holes on the surface of the sheet.
[0010] It is also expected to succeed in obtaining jaws on curved surfaces. This way was
substantially stopped before, because the founding technique allows the realization
of fusions on curved surfaces only with expensive equipments and the consequent high
costs of hand-manufactured articles.
[0011] It is also desired to achieve times of manufacture meaningfully inferior than the
present ones.
[0012] All the above-mentioned goods and other goods which will be better specified after,
are obtained by a method for moulding jaws suitable for locking stones on curved surfaces
of trinket and jewellry goods. This method is characterized in that such jaws are
obtained by coinage of metallic-semimanufactured articles of sheet metal, precious
or not, in which the coining die or the drawing die has the negative print of the
jaws to be obtained.
[0013] As regards the formation of jaws on curved surfaces, after a coinage operation which
produces jaws, a further bending or cutting up operation and a bending operation on
curved surfaces by bending cones follows and/or folders and cutters which present
notches suitable to contain each jaw before or after a deformation.
[0014] Besides the possibility obtain jaws from surfaces of a thickness of about 0,18 mm,
using the method according to the invention a very high productive capacity can be
obtained. In fact the times of coinage and/or cutting up and coinage are so reduced
that even 120-150 pieces in one minute can be obtained.
[0015] Other features and peculiarities of the invention will be better described in the
following example, given as an indicative but not limitative title, shown by the following
drawings, wherein:
- fig. 1 is a trinket or jewellry object whose surface has jaws made by the moulding
method according to the invention;
- fig. 2 shows the object in fig. 1 with its jaws belt to retain stones;
- fig. 3 is a section of the coining die and the drawing die during the jaw moulding;
- fig. 4 is a section which shows the bending operation of the object in fig. 1 after
the moulding operation.
[0016] As can be observed in fig. 3 a coining die, indicated as a whole in section with
1, presents a serial of notches 2, which can be obtained, for example, by chasing
or by electrical discharge machining according to the possibilities of working. When
a sheet metal 4 is placed between the coining die 1 and the drawing die 3, a moulding,
by pressing of the sheet metal 4, is given through a press whose sledge is connected
to the drawing die in the example. The excess of material in the sheet metal, due
to the squashing of the thickness between the coining die 1 and the drawing die 3,
caused the notches 2 to fill on the coining die 1.
[0017] So doing, also thin jaws, obtainable by sheet metals with thicknesses even less than
0,3 mm.
[0018] If the finished surface is curved, as in figs. 1 and 2, after a coinage operation
there is a moulding operation on a mould which has a coining die 5 with a recess 6
so large as to receive the jaws 2 both before and after the bending of the surface
4, without deforming them.
[0019] On the coining die 5 the sheet metal 4 formed with the jaws is applied and through
the pression exercized by the drawing die 7 the final bending to obtain the surface
is made, as can be seen in figs. 1 and 2.
[0020] As seen, the obtaining of the jaws through coinage instead of fusion makes obtain
sheet metals with jaws with very low thicknesses. This happens with an evident advantage
for all the trinket or jewellry, which wants to obtain trinket or jewellry goods with
sheet metals as light as possible and so thinner.
1. Method for moulding jaws (2) to lock stones on a plane metal sheet belonging to jewellry
goods, characterized in that it comprises at least one coinage operation of the plane metal sheet, where the coining
die presents positive marks of the jaws and the drawing die presents negative marks
of the jaws, or vice versa, said plane metal sheet being without holes after the coinage
operation.
2. The method according to claim 1) characterized in that for the purpose to obtain curved surfaces with jaws in the jewellry goods, after
the first coinage operation of claim 1), a round bending operation follows with another
coining die having a curved surface presenting recesses suited to contain each jaws
before and after the bending operation.
3. Method for moulding jaws according to claim 1) or 2), characterized in that the coinage operation and/or the bending operation is followed by a cutting up operation.